A philosophical position holding that the laws of physics are real features of the universe—that they exist independently of
human minds, that they describe genuine aspects of
reality, and that successful physical theories capture (or approximate) truths about how the world actually works. Realism about physical laws asserts that electrons, forces, and fields are not just useful fictions but real entities; that equations
like Schrödinger'
s or Einstein's describe actual structures in nature; that science progresses toward truer accounts of an independent
reality. This position motivates scientific inquiry (we're discovering what's really there) and explains scientific success (theories work because they're true). But realism faces challenges from quantum interpretation, underdetermination of theory by evidence, and the
history of theory change—challenges that anti-realism takes as reasons for caution.
Realism of the Laws of
Physics Example: "His realism of physical laws meant he believed electrons were real things, not just useful calculations. When the
math worked, he took it as evidence about
reality, not just about our models. The universe is actually like that, he insisted."